GFL Laboratory devices (Deep Freezers, Water Baths, Shaking Water Baths, Incubators, Shakers and Water Stills) are used in the medical, scientific and industrial field in more than 150 countries worldwide. GFL products are application oriented and technically mature. They are renowned for their durability and reliability.

Deep Freezers
Chest and Upright Freezers for long-term storage of organic substances and quality assurance testing. 12 Chest Freezers with six different volumes, respectively, six Upright Freezers having three different storage volumes. For temperatures up to -85 ºC, 30 to 500 litres capacity.

Shakers
15 models with orbital, reciprocating, orbital rocking, rocking or rotating motion.

Water Baths
Incubation / Inactivation Baths, Water Baths for evaporation, Water Baths for fume hoods, Multiple Water Baths. Tissue Float Bath for stretching and drying cut tissues.

Shaking Water Baths
with orbital or reciprocating motion. THERMOLAB® - quadrothermal Shaking Water Bath with reciprocating motion - four individually settable incubation temperatures.

Incubators
Shaking Incubators with orbital motion and built-in cooling coil. Hybridisation Incubator for exact detections of DNA and RNA probes. Mini Incubator and Tube Roller Incubator for tempering and incubations / hybridisations

Water Stills
4 product lines, comprising 14 different models with capacities of 2-12 litres of distillate per hour, made of stainless steel or glass, for single and double distillation. For ultrapure, low-gas, bacteria and pyrogen free distillate with a very low conductivity.

Target Groups for these products are users in research labs, standard and special labs for medicine, science and industry.

Topics:
  • incubators
  • deep freezers
  • distillation systems
  • shakers
  • water baths
  • shaking incubators
  • water stills

Contact / Request information

Contact the supplier and request the catalogue free of charge:

Additional Information

Your browser is not current. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 does not support some functions on Chemie.DE